At 60 years old, Don Fry lives quietly in Catalina, Arizona, about 30 miles north of Tucson. The legendary mustache is still there. The gravel-chewing voice still carries weight. And the aura of a man who once embodied violence itself hasnât faded.
But the man known as The Predatorâone of the toughest fighters in MMA historyâno longer talks about wins, belts, or glory. When asked about the hardest opponent he ever faced, Fry doesnât hesitate.
âHe stole my soul. I was never the same after that fight.â
This is the story of Don Fryâs hardest battlesâand the one fight that took something from him that never came back.
Donald Fry was born on November 23, 1965, in Sierra Vista, Arizona, a small desert town near the Mexican border. He rarely speaks about his childhood, but when he does, the pain is unmistakable.
In a 2022 interview, Fry revealed experiences that left him permanently scarred.
âIâd like to kill those f***ers that did that to me,â he said quietly, staring out a window with a cigar in hand.
That rage followed him throughout his life. It powered his head-down, tail-up fighting style. It made him fearless. And it made him dangerous.
Fry wrestled at Buena High School, then Arizona State University under future UFC legend Dan Severn, before transferring to Oklahoma State to train alongside Randy Couture. In 1987, he won freestyle and Greco-Roman events at Olympic qualifiersâelite, but just short of international greatness.
After college, Fry boxed professionally, worked as a firefighter, and eventually answered the call that would define his life: the UFC.
The Birth of a Predator
On February 16, 1996, at UFC 8 in Birmingham, Alabama, Don Fry made his MMA debutâand changed the sport overnight.
He knocked out Thomas Ramirez in eight seconds. Stopped Sam Adkins via doctor stoppage. Submitted Gary Goodridge in the finals.
Three fights. Three wins. One tournament championship.
At 1â0, Fry was already a UFC champion.
At UFC 9, he battered Brazilian jiu-jitsu ace Amaury Bitetti in a savage brawl that sent Bitetti to the hospital. Fans were witnessing something new: a true cross-trained fighter who could wrestle, punch, and impose his will.
Then came UFC 10âthe night everything changed.
Mark Coleman and the First Crack
UFC 10 was a brutal tournament, and Fry took the hardest path imaginable. He fought Mark Hall for ten exhausting minutes. Then Brian Johnstonâwho hit Fry so hard he later admitted it was the only time he ever considered quitting.
Waiting in the finals was Mark âThe Hammerâ Coleman: Olympic wrestler, NCAA All-American, Pan-American gold medalist.
Coleman was fresher. Fry was exhausted, dehydrated, bleeding.
There was also betrayal.
Fryâs former trainer, Richard Hamilton, had turned against him and joined Colemanâs corner, screaming abuse directly into Fryâs ear from cageside.
The fight was one-sided. Colemanâs wrestling overwhelmed Fry. Punches, knees, headĘuŃŃs piled up. At 11:34, referee John McCarthy stopped it.
Don Fry suffered his first loss.
âHe beat the hell out of me,â Fry would later admit.
The loss festered. Fry turned down a short-notice rematch at UFC 11 out of anger and prideâa decision heâd regret forever.
Japan, Fame, and the Return
Fry won another tournament at Ultimate Ultimate 1996, then walked away from the UFC. The promotion couldnât afford him. New Japan Pro Wrestling could.
In Japan, Fry became a starâmaking $40,000 a monthâwhile remaining anonymous back home. But he never stopped watching Mark Coleman.
When Coleman shocked the world by winning the 2000 PRIDE Openweight Grand Prix, Fry felt the fire again.
âIf Mark could come back,â Fry said, âthen so could I.â
The rematch was booked for PRIDE 21 in 2002.
Fry spent everything preparingâover $50,000 in modern moneyâtraining in Hawaii, rebuilding his broken body for one last sHŕšĎ at redemption.
Then fate intervened.
Yoshihiro Takayama and the Fight That Took Everything
Weeks before the fight, Coleman was injured in training. PRIDE replaced him with Yoshihiro Takayama, a 6â6â, 270-pound professional wrestler with an 0â3 MMA record.
It made no sense.
But on June 23, 2002, inside the Saitama Super Arena, something legendary happened.
The crowd was restless. The card had been dull.
Then Fry and Takayama walked outâand refused to take a step backward.
For over six minutes, they stood toe-to-toe and traded punches that would have knocked out normal men. No clinching. No stalling. Just violence.
Referee Yuji Shimada cried while watching it unfold.
Eventually, Fry secured a takedown and finished Takayama with knees. At 6:10 of Round 1, it was over.
Takayama went to the hospital immediately. Hours later, a PRIDE official burst into his room to say Fry was still laid out in his locker room.
Takayama replied:
âHe is still the winner.â
The fight became immortalâJapanâs Ali vs. Frazier III. Recreated in films, games, and pro wrestling.
But it cost Fry everything.
âI should have retired after that fight,â Fry said.
âHe stole my soul. I was never the same.â
The Decline
Fry was right.
After Takayama, he went 3â4â1.
Hidehiko Yoshida submitted him. Gary Goodridge knocked him out. JĂŠrĂ´me Le Banner demolished him in 90 seconds. His body was breaking down. His spirit was gone.
Ken Shamrockâwho fought Fry in one last classicâlater said Fryâs punches were the hardest heâd ever been hit. Harder than Bas Rutten. Harder than chair sHŕšĎs from The Rock.
But even that didnât bring the fire back.
The Tragedy That Followed
In 2017, Yoshihiro Takayama was paralyzed from the shoulders down after a pro-wrestling accident.
Years later, Fry watched footage of the injury in silence.
âGod bless him,â Fry said.
âItâs not fair. Nobody else on the planet couldâve made that fight what it was.â
Takayama is now 49. He canât fight. He canât move. He lives dependent on others.
Fry lives with regretâbut no denial.
Who Was Don Fryâs Toughest Opponent?
Mark Coleman beat him senseless.
Brian Johnston hit him harder than anyone.
Tank Abbott delivered the hardest single punch of his career.
But Fry always comes back to one name.
Yoshihiro Takayama.
The man who matched his spirit punch for punch.
The man who changed him forever.
A Legacy Both Terrific and Tragic
Today, Don Fry co-hosts a podcast with Dan Severn. Heâs been honored by wrestling halls of fame. He reconciled with Tank Abbott. His body is brokenâbut his memory is sharp.
He has no regrets.
âI didnât pick it. It picked me.â
But when Fry rewatches the Takayama fightâand the footage of what came afterâthereâs only silence.
One man became a legend.
The other lost his body.
That is the real tragedy of the toughest fight Don Fry ever had.
